Quick Comparison
| Lactic Acid | Niacinamide | |
|---|---|---|
| Typical Concentration | Concentrations: 5-12% for daily use. 30-50% for professional peels. Start with 5% every other night. The Ordinary offers 5% (gentle) and 10% (moderate) options. Always use SPF during the day. | Concentrations: 2-10%. 5% is the most studied concentration and provides the best balance of efficacy and tolerability. Higher concentrations (10%) are available but may cause irritation in sensitive skin without proportional benefit. Apply morning and/or night. |
| Application | Topical (serum, peel, toner). Apply to dry skin at night. Follow with moisturizer. | Topical (serum, moisturizer, toner). Water-soluble. Stable in formulation. Compatible with most actives. |
| Research Papers | 10 papers | 10 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Lactic Acid
Lactic acid (90 Da, larger than glycolic acid) exfoliates via the standard AHA mechanism: chelating calcium at corneodesmosomes and promoting desquamation through protease activation. Unlike glycolic acid, lactic acid is a natural component of the skin's natural moisturizing factor (NMF) and functions as a humectant, drawing water into the stratum corneum through hygroscopic binding. It inhibits tyrosinase enzyme activity in melanocytes, providing mild brightening. At higher concentrations (10%+), lactic acid upregulates serine palmitoyltransferase and glucosylceramide synthase in keratinocytes, stimulating ceramide synthesis and improving barrier lipid composition. It also enhances filaggrin proteolysis to NMF components. This dual action—exfoliation plus barrier support—makes it the most moisturizing AHA and clinically useful for dry, sensitive, or barrier-compromised skin.
Niacinamide
Niacinamide is converted to NAD+ via the Preiss-Handler pathway—essential for cellular respiration, DNA repair (PARP), and sirtuin regulation. In keratinocytes, it upregulates serine palmitoyltransferase and fatty acid elongases, increasing ceramide synthesis and strengthening the barrier. It inhibits melanosome transfer by downregulating protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2) on keratinocytes—brightening without tyrosinase inhibition. In sebocytes, it normalizes lipid synthesis and reduces sebum (possibly via AMPK). Niacinamide inhibits NF-kB translocation, suppressing IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-8. It inhibits phosphodiesterase, increasing cAMP and modulating keratinocyte differentiation. These multi-pathway effects explain broad efficacy across barrier repair, brightening, acne, and anti-aging.
Risks & Safety
Lactic Acid
Common
Mild stinging, redness — less than glycolic acid at equivalent concentrations. Sun sensitivity.
Serious
None at cosmetic concentrations.
Rare
Over-exfoliation with daily high-concentration use.
Niacinamide
Common
Very well-tolerated at 2-5%. Flushing/redness at concentrations above 5% in some individuals.
Serious
None documented.
Rare
Contact dermatitis (uncommon). Old advice to avoid combining with vitamin C is largely debunked at product pH levels.
Full Profiles
Lactic Acid →
A gentle AHA derived from milk that provides chemical exfoliation plus hydration — a unique dual benefit. Lactic acid has a larger molecular size than glycolic acid, so it penetrates more slowly and causes less irritation, making it ideal for sensitive skin and AHA beginners. It also has humectant properties, drawing moisture into the skin as it exfoliates.
Niacinamide →
A true multitasker — niacinamide (vitamin B3) addresses almost every skin concern simultaneously. It strengthens the skin barrier by boosting ceramide production, reduces hyperpigmentation by inhibiting melanosome transfer, controls sebum production, minimizes pore appearance, reduces redness, and has anti-aging benefits. One of the most versatile and well-tolerated actives in skincare.